Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Grace in the Changed Life

Genesis 44 relates the exciting story of the transformation of Judah.  Here we find Judah and his brothers in the home of Joseph, who they still don’t know is Joseph, and they are faced with a great trial.  Joseph proposes to keep Benjamin in Egypt as his servant and send the rest of the brothers home.  Judah, who had been so quick to sell Joseph as a slave and to deprive Jacob of his favorite son, reveals the new life that God had given him after he confessed his sins and turned to God in Genesis 38. 
Fanny Crosby wrote the popular hymn “Draw Me Nearer” also known as “I Am Thine, O Lord”.  The second stanza reads: “Consecrate me now to Thy service, Lord, by the power of grace divine; let my soul look up with a steadfast hope, and my will be lost in Thine.”  Think of those last few words, “And my will be lost in Thine”.  This picture of the consecrated life shines clearly in the action that Judah took in Genesis 44.  He approached Joseph and said, “For your servant became surety for the lad (Benjamin) to my father, saying, ‘If I do not bring him back to you, then I shall bear the blame before my father forever’.”  Then he offered himself to stay as a permanent slave to Joseph in exchange for Benjamin’s freedom.  The will to live his own life, to have his own freedoms, to care for his own family and to live in his own land were all subjected to the needs of others. 

That is the grace of God that we find in Jesus Christ.  He left heaven with all its glory and came to earth to be despised and rejected, to be in want and suffer with mankind and then to be crucified for our sin.  That is the grace of God that we find reflected in the great saints of old who endured much for the sake of the cross of Christ.  That is to be the grace of God reflected in our lives as we give ourselves to Christ.  The evidence of grace is not to be some ancient glory that we recall but not realize.  It is to be the reality of each believer’s life.  As Fanny Crosby wrote, “Draw me nearer, nearer blessed Lord, to the cross where Thou hast died; draw me nearer, nearer, nearer blessed Lord, to Thy precious, bleeding side.”  Let our grace walk reflect our nearness to God each day.  


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